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Wealth is the Reward
It's ok for founders to want to be rich
Hey y’all — do you want to be rich?
No, really. Take a second and answer that for yourself.
A lot of founders I’ve known have felt slightly awkward answering that question.
They say their motivation is more about helping people (an appeal to alleged altruism) or that they get enjoyment just out of building things and that’s a reward in and of itself.
But wealth is the reward for building something people actually want.
Or at least it’s supposed to be.
This week’s issue is a reminder that it’s ok if your goal is to make a lot of money.
Wealth is the Reward
Wanting to get rich gets a bad rap.
Maybe you even read the above part of this piece and thought there’s some moral highground for the founders who claim to be motivated by things other than getting rich.
But money is just a system to reward people for the value their work provides.
Startups give founders, who take on massive risk and make many hard decisions, a way to provide massive value and earn proportional rewards.
The more you understand the problem you’re solving, and the more effectively you solve it, the more you should be rewarded.
That’s simple, elegant, and true.
I think the world would be a much better place, were people more motivated by money. We have this beautiful distributed system telling us where our time would be best spent, and somehow we’ve made it culturally unacceptable to listen to it.
— Flo Crivello (@Altimor)
1:09 AM • Feb 12, 2018
Building companies is hard, and there needs to be a reward for doing that work. Even I didn’t fully appreciate how hard until I started building things.
Without getting too political, a capitalist “system” uses wealth as the reward for helping your fellow humans.
Ironically, the cases where this gets distorted tend to be the ones that make capitalism’s emergent behavior more challenging to exist.
In communist systems, value is distributed based on the whims of those in power. It has no regard for emergent value — only desired value, a fantasy.
What does this imply for startups? What can founders take away from this?
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